Why 3D Printing?

The product development landscape has evolved tremendously over the last 20 years.

Product designs have become much more complex in both their shape and functionality, while the need of reducing time-to-market has increased

The evolution of CAD Solid Modeling and computer technologies have brought forth a new way to produce prototypes know as Rapid Prototyping (RP).

Where it once took many weeks and lots of money to produce a prototype of a design, with RP it is now commonplace to produce the same prototype in a matter of hours for a fraction of the cost.

This evolution of RP has afforded companies the ability to verify and change designs more often while spending less time and money doing so. The end result is a product that:

Works the first time

Costs less to design and manufacture

Takes less time to design and manufacture

Meets customer demands

Gets to the market faster

How It Works

There are a number RP technologies on the market, all work under the same fundamental principals.

Solid Modeled CAD data, in a specific file format (STL), is processed and oriented in an optimal build position.

The data is then sent to the RP machine where it is numerically sliced into thin layers.

The RP machine then fabricates each 2-dimensional cross section and bonds it to the previous layer. A complete prototype is therefore built by stacking layer upon layer until the prototype is completed.